Oversize. Record of birthdates and marriage of Leonard H. Humason and Mary Sykes Humason in a central heart. Smaller hearts
and stylized flowers surround it. Four of the smaller hearts have been filled in with the birthdates of the Humason children.
The name of the artist is indecipherable.

Box 32

Memorandums of the road and the march of a corps of troops from Savannah to Augusta and some subsequent occurrences. 1779
January-April 28 p. manuscript. 23 cm. maps.

The manuscript is from the Abertarff Collection belonging to T. F. Fraser of Abertarff. Aldine Purchase.

Scope and Content Note

Another copy: 1 reel 35 mm negative microfilm. An account of Sir Archibald Campbell's expedition against Augusta, Georgia
with a British force sent from New York to Georgia by a member of his staff. The route of the Expedition is described in black
ink with notes in red ink telling of military events at each stage of the march. Included are a folding watercolor map of
the coast of Georgia and 6 pen and watercolor sectional maps of the route of the Expedition.

Box 192, Folder 17

Memoria estadistica de Tulancingo. Año de 1862.1862

Physical Description: (Holograph, bound).

Box 16

Mining and land stock certificates for various Central American and Cuban companies. 36 pieces.

Gift of Professor Roland D. Hussey, 1958 December.

Scope and Content Note

Certificates of the following companies: British Central American Land Co.; Royal Santiago Mining Co.; and Bolibar Mining
Association.

Box 16

[New Orleans, Battle of, 1815 - documents]. circa 1809-1816 5 pieces.

Aldine Purchase.

Scope and Content Note

Includes: A letter from Brigadier General David Banister Morgan (1773-1848) to Major General Andrew Jackson, Camp Right Bank,
[Louisiana], 1815 February 4. A letter from Col. Robert Nicholas (1793-1857) to Colonel Robert Butler, Cantonment Davis, [Louisiana?],
1816 March 8. Muster roll of field and staff officers of Major Nathaniel Powers [I], Battalion of Madison County mounted gunmen
in the service of the United States on an expedition against the Creek Indians under the command of Major General Andrew Jackson
[1809?]. An exchange note for Creek chief Spakakhafeo from Aide de Camp Thomas Langford Butler (1789-1880), 1814 September
20. A certification by Major Nathaniel Powers concerning provisions, 1814 January 29.

Box 9

New York (City) Mayor. Passport of Charles C. Walden, New York. 1808 July 15 1 page. Printed form filled in and signed.

Aldine Purchase.

Scope and Content Note

Signed by DeWitt Clinton as Mayor of New York.

Box 193, Folder 8

Palos verdes. Title Insurance and Trust. Printed magazine (advertisement?) on highlights of city.n.d.

Physical Description: (1 item).

Scope and Content Note

Front and back cover in fragments - Very Brittle.

Box 5

Sacramento letter. 2 als. 18--

Gift of Lindley Bynum 1947 Feb 20.

Scope and Content Note

(Ask him about this)

Box 201, Folder 12

Short stories.n.d.

Physical Description: (6 typescripts, carbon).

Scope and Content Note

One signed Edith Klopfer, two untitled, with 22 loose photographs.

Box 284, Folder 16

Stammbuch [German: album] (item 1 of 3).1810-1919

Physical Description: (1 item, 73 leaves).

Scope and Content Note

With holograph inscriptions [in German, 1 in Latin], 4 with etchings on back.

Mrs. Adams (a daughter of John Brown, the abolitionist) records her memories, and what others have told her, of Louisa May
Alcott and her family, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Lord Alfred Tennyson, in the period circa 1860. There is no reference to John
Brown in the manuscript. Unpublished.

Also includes original water color by P. H. Nicholson, 1843 and a small original water color by artist Tony Johannot (?).
1 letter, n.d., from Johannot with reference to Ainsworth. Includes 1 letter to Albert Richard Smith, 1850 April 30.

These letters relate to the publishing of Mrs. Aldington's poetry by the Reverend Bubb who operated the Clerk's Private Press
in Cleveland, Ohio. Most of the letters are undated. See also: the letters of Richard Aldington to the Reverend Bubb, also
in Box 18.

"Typescript from which was hand-set by Nancy Cunard the poem of the Eaten Heart ... for the Hours Press edition of 200 numbered
and signed copies, at Chapelle-Reanville, Normandy, France, spring, 1929." With this: an unbound copy of the Hours Press edition
of The Eaten Heart, signed by Aldington.

These letters related to the publishing of some of Aldington's poetry by the Reverend Bubb who operated the Clerk's Private
Press in Cleveland, Ohio. Enclosed with the letter of 1918 January 21, is a letter (1918 January 15) from Jean de Gourmont
to Aldington, giving permission for Bubb to publish some of the work of his brother, Remy de Gourmont.

"Movietones" was limited to 10 copies, privately printed. These proofs contain some deleted material. With a holograph inscription,
signed, on the first leaf. In a grey linen case with a morocco backstrip.

Arnold, 19th century English author and then headmaster of Rugby, writes in answer to an inquiry from a father as to tuition,
et cetera, at Rugby School.

Box 30

Astor Family. Correspondence and documents, 1792-1930. 7 pieces.

Aldine Purchase.

Scope and Content Note

Includes shipping and stock accounts of John Jacob Astor. A letter from the same concerning North West Co. in the fur trade.
A letter from WIlliam B., his son, to Thomas M. Olcott, 1860 November 26. And notes from Helen Astor, wife of Vincent Astor.

Letter from Brigham Young giving topographical information concerning Utah Territory,1862 April 28. Letter from Leland Stanford
declining Bancroft's offer to print the Central Pacific Railroad Co.'s timetables in his "Guide," 1873 November 24. A Letter
to H. L. Preston from the History Co. relating to financial arrangements for purchase of Bancroft's histories, 1889 January
21. Originals in the Bancroft LIbrary, University of California, Berkeley.

Beardsley was Senator from New York in 1823, later Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and United States District Attorney
for northern New York State under Jackson. 10 holograph letters signed, and one printed letter, recommending political appointments
for various "politically sound" members of the Democratic Party. Also included is a biographical clipping.

Letters to William Wharm, Philadelphia, 1800 February 15, and to John Mason, Philadelphia, 1802 July 23, concerning stock
in the Bank of Columbia, of which Wharm was Cashier and Mason was President. Letter from John Barclay to Thomas Mifflin, Governor
of Pennsylvania, 1793 August 15, concerning payments to Biddle.

Box 10

Biddle, Nicholas, 1786-1844. Correspondence. 1832-1837 4 pieces.

Aldine purchase.

Scope and Content Note

Includes letter from Louis McLane, Andrew Jackson's Secretary of the Treasury, to Biddle, 1832 December 15, concerning transfers
of federal funds in the Bank of the United States and state banks. Also includes a letter from Biddle to Thomas M. Burrows,
1837 December 26, concerning financing of the Eire Railroad. Coleridge, Samuel T. Letter to "Dear Sir," from Highgate. 1819
February 27 2 leaves, holograph signed.

Bleecker was a New York lawyer, Federalist member of Congress from 1811 to 1813, later a regent of the University of New York
State, and he was appointed by Van Buren in 1839 as Charge d'Affaires at the Hague. 10 holograph letters signed, concerning
payments due to various of Bleecker's clients.

Copies of letters sent by Bolles as American Vice Consul at Vera Cruz during the revolution in Mexico and the seige of Vera
Cruz, relating to such matters as piracy and the capture of American vessels. Letters to Secretaries Louis McLane and Edward
Livingston.

Letters to Browne, English illustrator, concerning his work. They include letters from Ada Ellen Bayly (Edna Lyall, pseudonym).
They also include an invitation to membership from the Royal Institute of Painters in water colours, as well as letters from
numerous authors thanking Browne for his illustrations for their work. Letters are arranged alphabetically within the folder
by author.

A letter of introduction and recommendation for Mrs. Elizabeth S. Comstock, a philanthropist engaged in visiting civil and
military hospitals, et cetera. Also includes a letter from Mrs. Burnside to the Paymaster of the Army, acknowledging receipt
of amount paid to the General for the month of August.

Letter to Theodore Tilton, Boston, 1871 June 26, concerning the Treaty of Washington and James G. Bennett's New York Herald.
Letter to R. W. Mercer, Boston, 1885 January 7. Letter to J. W. Burt, Washington D. C., 1889 September 11, concerning the
treason of William B. Mumford at New Orleans during the Civil War, mention of David G. Farragut.

Included are a few letters from various publishers (Wishart & Co.; William Heinemann, Ltd.; Jonathan Cape, Ltd.; Pagany, London;
Philolexian Society, Columbia College, New York; Longmans Green Co., Ltd.) to Mary Butts and forwarded by her to her agent.
Correspondence mainly concerns the selling and publishing of Mary Butts' literary works.

Cambreleng, Representative from New York and minister to Russia, writes to several Secretarys of the Navy and to other Washington,
D. C. persons, concerning appointments, and Congressional affairs. Letters to Woodbury and Paulding bear those officer holograph
endorsements.

Another copy. Part of a reel, 35 mm. Negative microfilm. First published in his "Gertrude of Wyoming," London, 1809, with
the title, "Ye Mariners of England." There are seven changes in the published version.

Cook, Theodore Pease, 1844-1916. Correspondence to John Thompson Hoffman, Albany, New York and Utica, New York. 1870 December
7 and 1871 November 11 2 letters. Holograph signed.

Aldine purchase.

Scope and Content Note

Letter of 1870, of resignation from the post of Military Secretary to the staff of Hoffman, Governor of New York, and remarks
of appreciation. Letter of 1871 mentions Colonel James Fisk and the defeat of the Democratic party in state elections.

Box 9

Cooke, Bates, 1787-1841. To the editor of the Congressional Globe, Washington. 1831 December 31 and 1832 June 20 2 letters.
A.L.S.

1 letter to Theodore Watts-Dunton, 1907 July 9. Document, 1908 January 17: agreement between Butterick Pub. Co., New York,
and The Author's Syndicate, London, to buy the serial rights of Crawford's "Stradella;" with Theodore Dreiser's signature
as witness. Document, 1909 April 2: agreement between Crawford and William Waldorf Astor, publisher of the Pall Mall Magazine,
for the serial rights of "The undesirable governess".

Cushing, Representative from Massachusetts, writes about copy of a report, and an engagement to speak in Portsmouth, Maine.
Also to Henry A. S. Dearborn, Newburyport, Massachussetts, 1839 October 14, thanking him for a specimen of a new printing
process.

Daly, New York jurist, writes to President Grant to recommend a friend for judicial appointment, to William M. Evarts concerning
Thomas A. Clarke for a justiceship of the Supreme Court, letter concerning literary work, letter concerning Lord Dumaren,
and letter concerning a meeting.

Davis, Representative from Massachusetts, writes to editor Niles about the Tariff reform bill and the influence of the President
on that Legislation. References to John S. Barbour, John Clayton, Felix Grundy, and other members of Congress.

Davis, New York jurist and justice of state Supreme Court, writes of litigation, to Thomas Murphy about an appointment, to
Chester A. Arthur as Collector of Port of New York concerning appointment, to Levi P. Morton as minister to France on the
same subject, to James Grant Wilson, satiric correspondence about Grover Cleveland, and letters concerning: invitations, personal
matters, and reference to United States Grant and Anthony J. Drexel.

Possible letter of Decatur, naval hero, on the basis of similarities in letters of the signature, but would have to be misdated.
Decatur was killed in the vicinity of Philadelphia in 1808 November. Subject relative to his bank account.

Dorsheimer, editor of the New York Star and lieutenant governor of New York during the administration of Samuel Tilden, writes
of litigation, his newspaper. Manuscript title page to a biography of Grover Cleveland and obituary clipping.

Elliot, Representative from South Carolina, writes in response to requests for aid and information. Addressees' names obscured.
Also includes biographical clippings about Elliot, one of the several African American Congressmen in the Reconstruction period.

Diary of Wilhemina (Fowler) Emery covers in two notebooks the first year of her residence in Los Angeles from 1905-1906. In
15 manuscript leaves, her husband Ernest T. Emery records a trip by train from Boston to Los Angeles.

These letters to Mr. Jones are largely concerned with reminiscences of Evans's work with color printing and engraving, as
well as the various artists with whom he worked. With these: letter (1909) from Edmund Wilfred Evans (son of Edmund Evans)
and three letters (1909) from Mary Evans (wife of Edmund Evans), all to Mr. Jones. With typed transcripts.

66 watercolor, oil, pen and ink, and pencil sketches, some noted as done at the age of 15 years, mounted in a notebook. Bound
in boards with a brown cloth spine. With this: 20 loose items in envelope, including an original pencil sketch of Evans by
Birket Foster, and proofs of four prints by Kate Greenaway.

A group of holograph letters by Edward Everett covering the period 1826-1858. Many are to Joseph E. Sprague of Massachusetts,
and concern such matter as the presidential campaign of 1828, national political happenings, and literary endeavors. There
is also a letter to Alexander H. Stephens and clippings giving historical data on Everett.

Letters to Fairchild when he worked for the Oxford University Press. Among the correspondents are Peggy Ashcroft, Sir Thomas
Bazley, Perry Belmont, Robert Benchley, John Mason Brown, Norman Douglas, Harold Ede, William Fadiman, Lloyd Frankenberg,
John Gielgud, Gerstle Mack, J. Herbert Hodgins, Sir Edward Marsh, Charles Mayo, Margaret O'Flaherty, Noel Sullivan, Benedict
Thielen, Wanda (Willson) Witman, Emlyn William. Photostatic copies of many of the letters are in the folder following the
original letters.

To Neal Harlow, San Francisco. Describing various editions of
The Life of Joaquin Murieta. With the above: Positive photostats of the first two pages of the 1859 and 1861 editions published by Butler & Co., San Francisco.

First draft of this poem, written 1962 May 1. Not known if published. With this is a typescript copy of the manuscript and
an account (1 leaf, typescript) by an unknown person of the writing of the poem. In a gray-green paper case.

Letter to Senator W.B. Allison of Iowa, December 13th, inviting him to dinner. Letter to Joel Munsell, New York, 1865 December
11, ordering a copy of Halls['] Eastern Vermont. Letter to General James Grant Wilson, New York, 1890 January 23, acknowledging
receipt of copy of Wilson's address before Onieda Historical Society.

Box 25

Fish, Hamilton, 1849-1936. Correspondence. 1 folder.

Teachers' Certificate. 1819

Scope and Content Note

A recommendation for Mr. Samuel Mills from Jabez Pond Fisher.

Box 170

Fisher, M.F.K. (Mary Frances Kennedy), 1908- . Archive.

Scope and Content Note

[Includes]: correspondence with William Targ, some typescript chapters for
With Bold Knife and Fork.

One volume of letters received by Fitch, 1888 May-July, while serving in the 50th Congress as a Republican representative
from the 13th New York District and concerning his speech, 1888 May 16, delivered in the House of Representatives on tariff
reform and in defense of the Mills Bill. Some letters are requests for printed copies of his speech. A letter, 1888 May 18,
from Henry George is included. There is also a scrapbook, 1870-1882, containing clippings and broadsides pertaining to his
law practice in New York City.

Flagg writes to Secretary of the Navy Woodbury, concerning an appointment, endorsed by Woodbury, to Luther Bradish, concerning
a pamphlet, and letter concerning New York State prisons. Letter to Woodbury signed by Silas Wright.

Letters sent as Collector of Customs for the Port of Albany to the following, who held the office of Collector of Customs
for the District and Port of New York: Edward Curtis, C.P. Van Ness and Cornelius Van Wyck Lawrence.

Box 192, Folder 15

Garland, William. Letter to Sam Glane.1932.

Scope and Content Note

re participation on a committee of the 10th Olympiad (1932: Los Angeles).

Bailiff's accounts of the manor of Gaspar from Lady Day, 1764-1799. Accounts are addressed to Colonel Sir Isaac Rebow, owner
from circa 1764 to 1782. After 1782 they are addressed to Mrs. Mary Rebow and the executors of the estate. Martin Shepherd
was bailiff from 1764 until 1783. His son Charles became bailiff between 1783 and 1799, but the year is uncertain as records
for this period are wanting. The accounts include a valuation of the estate made in 1772 by George Sangslor, as directed by
Thomas South, then steward of the estate. This gives annual realization from farm rentals and cutting of timber as 280. Receipts
for payment for work done on the estate by the Shepherd family and other tenents indicate repairs made, wood cut, et cetera.
Receipts for 1799 bear a two- pence stamp. Land tax, poor rates, and church rates are also noted.

Gorgas, Major and Chief of Ordinance of the War Department, Confederate States government, writes to an officer and to the
governors of Virginia and North Carolina on the subject of guns, armories and ammunition needed by the government.

45 holograph letters signed to Alexander West Hamilton of the Pemberton Valley Estate, St. Mary's, Jamaica [customs agent,
Kingston, Jamaica, 1811-1820?] concerning consignments of cargo in the ships "Robert," "Middlesex," and other. Letters are
from Robert Jamieson, captain of the "Robert," and from various plantation owners. Also includes 14 documents enumerating
amounts and types of cargo, by whom sent, disposal, and prices obtained. West appears to have represented a Glascow merchant's
investment firm [West India Merchant's] connected with one James Ewing.

Letter from [Colonel] James Gavin [?] to Hendricks, Greensburg, Indiana, 1867 May 4, concerning appointment for West Point.
Letter from Hendricks to same written on verso of leaf, Indianapolis, 1867 May 8, replying that the district vacancy is already
filled and that the matter is out of his hands.

Letters from various Protestant Episcopal Bishops, including John H. Vincent, Henry M. Jackson, David S. Tuttle, William Part,
Cleland K. Nelson, Joseph H. Johnson, Thomas A. Starkey, John Scarborough, Chancey B. Brewster, and Sidney C. Partridge. Some
of the letters concern the Christian Social Union, and there is one letter from Bishop Hodges to a Mrs. Gozzaldi, enclosing
an autograph of Sidney C. Partridge, Bishop of Tokyo.

The letter of 1890 May 16 is to Francis Marshall. The letter of 1891 December 21 is to Samuel May. With these: Holograph leaf
(fragment), describing Cambridge, Massachusetts, from the poem "Parson Turell's Legacy." Signed at a later date, "A scrap
saved for my autograph. Oliver Wendell Holmes. Boston, Dec. 16th, 1891."

Included is a a receipt, 1850 December 28, made out to Leigh Hunt for his laundry. 1 letter to Anne Mathews [Mrs. Charles
Mathews], 1835 September 23. 1 letter to Thornton Leigh Hunt, her son, March 23 [no year]. Another copy. 1 reel 35 mm negative
microfilm.

Response by Ingersoll, member of the House of Representatives, 1851-1855, to inquiry concerning speeches delivered twenty
years before.

Box 189, Folder 3

Interstate Commerce Commission. Reports and correspondence.1961-68.

Scope and Content Note

With Dudley Pergrum
re Southern Pacific Railroad & NYRR.

Box 197, Folder 4

Izant, Betty.
Paradise lost.
1966.

Physical Description: (Typescript).

Box 23

Jackson, Andrew, President of the United States., 1767-1845. Document, signed by President Jackson, granting 160 acres of
land in the district of Crawfordsville, Indiana, to Edward Thomas of Warren County, Ohio. Washington, D. C. 1829 April 2 1
l. 24 x

Gift of the Rancho San Jose de Buenos Aires Chapter of the Daughter of the American Revolution per Mrs. Mary Little Grim,
1940 October.

Jean Fraysse was the editor of "Les Feux de Paris," 1935-1937. Most of the letters concern matters relevant to the work of
Jacob and his contemporaries and reference is made to many acquaintances prominent in the arts. Included in this group of
letters is one item addressed to "Monsieur LugnT Poe," n.d.

J. P. Kennedy was an author and United States Secretary of the Navy. 16 letters dated 1850-1870 to Robert C. Winthrop, Senator
from Massachusetts. Some of the letters discuss Edward Everett. With these: 1 letter from Winthrop to C. H. Brainard, regarding
Kennedy, 1853 May 7.

Letters refer to Kershaw's work on the bibliography of Richard Aldington.

Box 28

Kimball, Marston Henchman, 1897-1977. Keeping farm soil on the farm; a factual study of the effects of farm practices and
feasible farm structures on the retention or loss of soil from farms in southern California during the flood of February 27
- March 4, 1938, Los Angeles. 1938 June 222 l. typescript (possibly a copy). Illustrated maps.

Scope and Content Note

Prepared under the direction of Professor B. Crocheron, Director of Agricultural Extension, University of California, Berkeley,
California. The original manuscript is in the Los Angeles County Farm Advisor's Office, Los Angeles.

Box 32

Kinglsey, Martin, 1754-1835. Correspondence. 1811-1821 19 letters.

Scope and Content Note

Chiefly letters to his wife from Washington while serving as a Representative from Massachusetts in the Sixteenth Congress,
1819-1821. The letters describe people and political events in Washington. There is mention of dining with President James
Monroe, the Florida Treaty, the Yellowstone Expedition, the Missouri Compromise, the Barron-Decatur duel, and the slavery
question.

Box 14

Kluge, Friedrich. Correspondence and clippings removed from the Kluge Library.

1 letter to General Robert Goodloe Harper, undated. 1 letter to Baron Jean Guillaume Hyde de Neuville, 1823 May 17.

Box 30

Lancaster, Joseph, 1778-1838. Proposals, for a publication intended to diffuse a correct knowledge of the Lancasterian System,
throughout the United States of America... [Washington, D.C.]. Circa 1818 1 leaf. 25 x 19 cm. With holograph additions in
ink.

Scope and Content Note

A printed broadside. At the bottom of the page, in the author's hand, is a list of persons subscribing, with the number of
copies ordered. Included are Henry Clay, John Quincy Adams, and De Witt Clinton.

Landon, humorist-journalist, relates the circumstances of the way in which he was named Eli Perkins by Artemus Ward in 1865,
and the fact that Josh Billings suggested that he use it as a pen name, in 1868.

Lane, Senator from Indiana, asks an appointment for William H. Baum as messenger in Theaker's Patent Bureau. He acknowledges
a copy of Whitelaw Reid's "After the War," and describes the author as a well acquainted with the people and institutions
of the South, and the book as as well-written as Reid's wartime articles. Leedom, Richard. To James Gibson, Philadelphia.
1804 July 12 1 p. Holograph signed.

LeBaron, Francis. To Major General James Wilkinson. Correspondence. 1 folder.

Box 20

LeConte, Joseph Nisbet, 1870-1950. Early recollections of the mechanical and electrical departments. 1939 April 24 p. Typescript,
in one folder.

Gift: Engineering Library, UCLA, 1956.

Scope and Content Note

Contains LeConte's recollections of the founding of the College of Engineering at the University of California at Berkeley.
Includes a description of both the physical plant, and of the departmental personnel, circa 1868-1939.

Reports, circulars, and a letter addressed to Lewis as a stockholder in the Louisville and Portland Canal Co. by Simeon S.
Goodwin, Secretary of the company. Included are: a letter, 1834 August 28, concerning stock dividends; the company's annual
reports, 1832-1838 and 1842; circulars addressed to the stockholders, 1832-1835 and 1837; and lists of the steamboats navigating
the Louisville and Portland Canal, 1833-1837.

Livermore, clergyman, writes in response to an invitation to celebrate Horace Greeley's 61st birthday. He describes the similarity
between his and Greeley's birth and early life in New Hampshire and of their political opinions. He lauds Greeley for his
contributions to the elevation and welfare of the nation. Ludewig, Hermann Ernst, 1809-1856. Correspondence to J. K. Tefft,
New York. 1846-1847 3 pieces holograph signed.

Commercial and legal papers of the Livingston family, including the import certificates of William A., legal papers of Peter
R. and Edward and the journal of Janet (Livingston) Montgomery. Also included: document signed by Capt. William Johnstone,
and one signed by Philip Livingston on behalf of William Riley, which are petitions for grants of land in the province of
West Florida.

1 letter to Robert Browning, n.d. 2 letters to Coulson Kernahan, May 30, 1891 and January 5, 1894. 1 letter to John Hannah,
Oct. 12, 1868, regarding George Cruikshank. 1 letter to Austin Bobson, March 29 [1890]. 2 letters to Locker-Lampson from Kegan
Paul, Trench & Co., are laid in english Living Poets, London, Kegan Paul, Trench & Co., 188s: Collection PR 1223 / L76 / 1883.
On one of the blank pages of notes of Locker-Lampson answering one of the letters.

Box 7

Logan, J. H. To the Regents of the University of California, Santa Cruz, California. 1882.

Purchased from Zamboni, April, 1952.

Scope and Content Note

Letter concerning his application to the Regents for University Location No. 824, accompanied by document entitled: University
Location No. 824. J. H. Logan, applicant. Action had relative thereto, and signed by E. O. F. Hastings, Land Attorney, University
of California.

With this: Letter, dated April 18, 1904, signed "Polly," of the San Francisco Examiner, to Miss Jane Sheaff, Los Angeles,
presenting her with this Jack London manuscript. Manuscript apparently published by the San Fransisco Examiner.

A poem written for a Harvard commencement dinner, 1866; in "Complete Poetical Works," 1902. With this: a holograph letter
from Oliver Wendell Holmes to the printer making arrangements for the printing of the poem; and a galley proof of the printed
poem. 1 leaf.

Includes correspondence written 1864 December 19 to Thomas Hill, president of Harvard. Also includes correspondence written
1876 March 2 to A. Denham & Co., regarding a copy of Homer to be given to Harvard.

Concerning the appointment of a federal marshall. Luck conveys the recommendation by Governor [Salmon P.] Chase of Ohio of
a Mr. French as the best choice for the office.

Box 30

Macdonald, Dwight, 1906-1982. Sweet are the uses of usage. Book review of Modern English usage by H. W. Fowler. New York.
1958 136-154 p. 15 leaves. 29 cm. Extensive holograph corrections and revisions in pencil.

Gift of Philip Durham, 1960 June.

Scope and Content Note

Text extracted from the 1958 May 17 issue of The New Yorker. Mr. Macdonald has taken two copies of his article, revised and
corrected it for inclusion in Harbrace College Reader, edited by Mark Schorer, Philip Durham, and Everett L. Jones, Harcourt,
Brace & Co., New York, 1959. With this: letter from Dwight Macdonald to Philip Durham discussing the manuscript. New York,
1958 September 15. 1 p.

Written as United States Surveyor General for California appointing Hays as his deputy for the final survey of the Rancho
Trabuco. Includes copy of diseo for Rancho Trabuco, 1 leaf. Photostat. 2 leaves. L.S. (Photostat)

Box 5

Magee, John. Riding the Wind.

Scope and Content Note

Typescript of poem (autograph: Basil Rathbone?). Short biographical sketch of John Magee.

Madison acknowledges receipt of a copy of Inside Out, a study of abuses in New York state prisons, and hopes that author Coffee's
talents would verify his sentiments, and enable him to provide for his family.

Box 5

Mainwaring, Roland. 1 als. 1889 Dec 21

Removed from: Mainwaring, Rowland. Annal of bath, from the year 1800 to the passing of the municipal act. *DA 690 B3M2

Maximilian writes to the Mayor and the Council of Wumpfen (?) that he has dispatched "Sebaldus von Plarun to deal with you
in matters concerning Us." He goes on to "recommend that you not only believe him in all things, but that you also act obediently
afterwards." With transcript.

The first leaf is stamped, "The Grand Magazine. 6 Jun. 1905. Editorial Department." With this: Memorandum to the Editor of
The Grand Magazine, 1905 May 30. Author's note to: "His Oldest Friends, by Miss Braddon." This manuscript statement is in
the hand of W. H. S. Maxwell.

Holograph letter from Maxwell, dated 1896 March 31, written from Annesley Bank, Lyndhurst, Hants, to Mr. James Mills, at Beverley,
Yorks, concerning proof sheets of Three Times Dead. Holograph letters signed from John Maxwell, publisher, dated 1887 April
19, written from St. James's Magazine, to Charles Empson, publisher, concerning publication rights to Three Times Dead. Holograph
letter signed from Charles R. Empson, dated 1896 January 2, written from Hull, to Mr. James Mills of Beverley, asking for
help at a time of bereavement. Loose pages from published edition of Three Times Dead: pages 25-32 (from chapters VII and
VIII) and pages 57, 58, 63, and 64 (from Chapters I and II). Also includes, 3 clippings and a 1 page holograph discussion
of the bibliographical history of this novel.

Letter to Dr. Conway, 1873 March 1. Letter to Herman Whitaker, June 18. Letter to Mr. McLaughlin, 1893 March 7. Printed poems
entitled "The Dead Millionaire," and "The Fortunate Isles" with corrections by the author in his own handwriting. Photocopy
of letter to William Hayes Ward, 1873 January 3. Photocopy of poem on the death of Bret Harte by Miller, 1902.

1 letter to John Ruskin, 1852 October 1. Included is a holograph fragment from "Rienzi," 1841 March 7. 1 letter to Archdeacon
Francis Wrangham, 1825 March 9. 1 letter to William Cox Bennett, 1854 August 23. 1 letter to Samuel Carter Hall, 1834 October
24.

Includes carbon copy of The Yosemite by John Muir (New York, Century Co., 1912), various stages of writing of several chapters,
some plates from the book, and a typescript of "The Kings river Yosemite" which did not appear in the book.

Letters chiefly to Benjamin Franklin concerning support of American Independence in Ireland and England. Newenham was M. P.
for Dublin, 1776-1797, and Baron of the Exchequer in Ireland. Originals in American Philosophical Society and the Historical
Society of Pennsylvania.

General Order No. 14 relative to the procedure of detailing troops from one command to another, issued by command of Ord,
major general commanding, over the signature of P. Ord, major and assistant adjutant general of volunteers.

Description of a journey from Fort Yuma, California to the coast of Lower California, starting from Port Isabella in 1869.

Box 7

Palmer family business papers, 1828-1867. Ca. 80 pieces.

Gift: Ernst V. Sutton, Sept., 1955.

Scope and Content Note

Consisting of the stocks, accounts, property indentures and other agreements of George Palmer and the checks of Everard Palmer,
relating to their finances and business in Buffalo and Palmyra, New York.

Concerning the affairs of a schoolteacher, the feelings of local citizens concerning the Tariff of 1833, S.C.'s nullification,
and legislature of the state, including temperance and abolition of imprisonment for debt.

Box 29

Peacock, Thomas Love, 1785-1866. Correspondence. 1 folder.

Box 17

Pearlberg, Irving. You can see Catalina, by Irv Pearlberg. Illustrations by Lee Mishkin with an introduction by Fred Beck
and O. K. Barnes. The hilarious story of UCLA. [Los Angeles]. 1949 19 leaves. 28 cm. Typescript with corrections.

Scope and Content Note

Published in Los Angeles (?), 1949. Chapter 3 is missing. There are two copies (original and carbon) of Chapter 4. Also includes
four of the original illustrations by Mishkin, and three cartoons he did for the UCLA Daily Bruin.

Box 23

Pearlberg, Irving. You can see Catalina, by Irv Pearlberg. Illustrations by Lee Mishkin. 7 items. Original pen and ink drawings.
Shelved oversize.

Concerning political machinations and spoils among the Jacksonians in Albany, New York. There is mention of Edwin Croswell
and William L. Marcy, members of the "Albany Regency "which dominated the state in the 1830s.

A letter to Walker H. French, Berwyn, Pennsylvania, 1884 November 13, expressing rejoicing over the election of Grover Cleveland
and asserting that Randall has no thought of obtaining appointment by Cleveland. A letter to Mrs. Flora G. Moulton, Washington,
1884 April 18 and a letter to Mr. John Burt, Philadelphia, 1889 August 3, both of which are responses for autographs by Randall,
Speaker of the House.

Negative photocopies of 25 volumes of diaries kept by the 18th century English drama editor, journalist, and solicitor of
Staple Inn. Reed writes briefly of his daily occupations: dining out, tea, church, and almost nightly visits to the theatre,
in London and out. Titles of plays are noted, together with names of men connected with the performances.

Edition limited to 150 copies, of which this is Number 44. With this is bound: Holograph manuscript of Ten Poems, plus 2 additional
poems, In Edinburgh, June 1940 and During an air-raid. Presentation copy to Peter Watson, Edinburgh, July 24, 1940. Bound
in marbled wrappers.

Includes resolves by the Board of Directors of the Bank of the United States, of which Sergeant was chairman, responding to
investigating committee of the United States House of Representatives, 1834 May 8.

Family letters covering the period of World War I, 1914-1916. The second group of letters, 1929- 1931, Berlin, relates to
the financing of a clinic for psychopathic patients. The clinic was under the supervision of Dr. Sigmund Freud, Anna Freud,
and Princess Marie Bonaparte. For detailed list of correspondents consult Collections file.

9 letters from 43 Broad St., Oxford, 1931 Aug 13 - 1932 Feb 29. 1 letter from Richmond, Surrey, 1928 Apr 30. Discussing Thomas
James Wise's antagonism at not receiving an advance copy of his Dryden research work he did on
Charley Wag, attributing authorship to George Augustus Sala; and other bibliographic matters. Including newspaper clipping dated 1932
Jan 12 from the Daily Telegraph of review ofbook; also assails John Hayward who criticized his dryden book in the
Times Literary Supplement. Letter Feb. 25, 1932 gives details of some The Dramatic Works of John Dryden.

First published in "Sand and Canvas: a Narrative of Adventures in Egypt, with a Sojourn among the Artists in Rome," by Samuel
Beran, London, Charles Gilpin, 1849. Reprinted as "The Three Sailors," in "Ballads and Songs," by William Makepeace Thackeray,
London, Cassell & Co., 1896. This manuscript copy differs in several respects from the printed copies. It is not known in
whose hand this manuscript is written. Five pen and ink drawings by an unknown artist illustrating this poem are mounted on
the leaves of the manuscript. Bound in brown morocco. With this: a clipping from "The Nation," 1913 November 6, about this
manuscript.

Train, author and railroad promoter, asks for Cooper, Representative from Tennessee, to give his attention to the attempt
by Thaddeus Stevens to prevent the alteration of the route of the Union Pacific Railroad, and hopes that President Andrew
Johnson will "put his foot down" in the matter as he did in previous matters. 3 clippings attached to the letter.

Correspondence, reports, notices, orders, et cetera pertaining to the administration of the Armory at Harper's Ferry, chiefly
in the handwriting of Edward Lucas, Jr., Superintendent of the Armory. Includes reports from the Master Armorer and the Watchman
concerning details of their work.